New Indian Law Scholarship

From SSRN:

Incl. Electronic Paper American Colonialism and Constitutional Redemption
California Law Review, Vol. 105, Forthcoming, UC Irvine School of Law Research Paper No. 2017-33
Seth Davis
University of California, Irvine School of Law

Incl. Electronic Paper Indian Sovereignty, General Federal Laws, and the Canons of Construction: An Overview and Update
Thomas Jefferson School of Law Research Paper No. 2987620
Bryan H. Wildenthal
Thomas Jefferson School of Law

Incl. Electronic Paper Indigenizing Equality
Yale Law & Policy Review, Vol. 35, No. 2, 2017
M. Alexander Pearl and Kyle C. Velte
Texas Tech University School of Law and Texas Tech University School of Law

From Bepress:

Budding Conflicts: Marijuana’s Impact On Unsettled Questions Of Tribal-State RelationsKatherine J. Florey

Denying Disgorgement: The Supreme Court’S Refusal To Grant The Crow Tribe ReliefAlex Galliani

Untangling The Court’S Sovereignty Doctrine To Allow For Greater Respect Of Tribal Authority In Addressing Domestic ViolenceLauren Oppenheimer

 

Clarkson: “Accredited Indians”

Gavin Clarkson posted “Accredited Indians: Increasing the Flow of Private Equity into Indian Country as a Domestic Emerging Market” on SSRN (and BEPRESS). Here’s the abstract:

Indian Country is America’s domestic emerging market, and as in a number of emerging markets, many successful businesses in Indian Country are starving for expansion capital. The US Treasury estimates that the private equity deficit in Indian Country is $44 billion. While the handful of wealthier tribes might be logical investors in private equity funds deploying capital in Indian Country, the existing securities laws present a significant impediment. In particular, Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933 does not treat tribes as “accredited investors,” thus denying those tribes the ability to participate in the private equity market. Since there is no principled reason to exclude tribes from the list of accredited investors, this article makes the case for extending accredited investor status to tribes.